The Five Worst New TV Shows This Fall

This week, as the rest of the world watches feats of human awesomeness in the London Olympics, TV reporters have been watching feats of human idiocy at the Television Critics Association press tour in L.A.

Sure, there have been some highlights. (Dexter could be renewed indefinitely? Tell us more.) But most of TCA involves panels of celebrities and showrunners rolling out new fall programming -- 65 percent of which is so utterly terrible that they won't survive beyond a single season.

This fall's debuts sound even more laughable than we've grown to expect. Did you know that someone gave Dharma from Dharma & Greg another show? Or that Dane Cook is a TV actor now? Or that some people still think monkeys are funny?

1600 PennBill Pullman and Jenna Elfman (yes, that's Dharma) star as President and First Lady Gilchrist in this comedy about family life in the White House. There's also Josh Gad -- who, on the up side, starred in the very funny Book of Mormon, but on the down side appears to be channeling a poor man's Jack Black -- as a grown-up son who's forced to move back in with the family. (Uh, Mr. President? You're rich, remember? Send the kid overseas and be done with it.) NBC's calling it Modern Family meets The West Wing. We're calling it, well, not that.

Animal PracticeHey, it's Justin Kirk! He's so funny on Weeds! Surely his new show will be a success!

Friend Me"We need a show for the kids of today," CBS execs said. "Something for the youngsters, with their Skrillex and their Axe body spray and their tampons soaked in vodka. Y'know what the kids love? Groupon. I've got it -- we'll make a show about youngsters who work at Groupon. We'll call it Friend Me, because that's what the kids say. Hey, what's McLovin doing these days?"

Malibu Country

Reba McIntyre is back with

Reba 2.0Malibu Country

, in which she plays a country music star starting over in her ex-husband's Malibu mansion. It's California, so there are pot jokes, and gay stereotypes, and all the rest of stereotypes designed to appeal to stereotypical conservative Midwesterners. Run, Lily Tomlin! It's a trap!

Next CallerOh for fuck's sake, they put Dane Cook on TV. He plays a shock jock (because he's so edgy, of course) coupled with -- and this is a direct quote -- "a chipper NPR feminist" named Stella Hoobler.

Quick, name a network TV show that's portrayed feminism fairly! (The West Wing doesn't count; we mentioned it already.) Yeah, we had trouble too. And we're guessing, based on a) Dane Cook, b) the inevitability of some awful "Stella Boobler" pun, and c) the fact that in the clip above, Stella's mere insistence on doing her job is enough to identify her as a feminist, Next Caller won't be improving that track record.

Ciara LaVelle is New Times' arts and culture editor. She earned her BS in journalism at Boston University, moved to Florida in 2004, and landed a job as a travel writer. For reasons that seemed sound at the time, she gave up her life of professional island-hopping to join New Times' staff in 2011. She left the paper in 2014 to start a family, but two years and two babies later, she returned in the hopes that someone on staff would agree to babysit. No takers yet.